The Indiana Supreme Court will not hear an appeal from a man whose 51 guns and ammunition were seized after authorities became
alarmed by his behavior near the site where missing Indiana University student Lauren Spierer was last seen.

A defendant attempted to persuade the Indiana Court of Appeals that the Class A felony classifications for dealing or possession
of cocaine are disproportionate by pointing to the recent revisions to the Criminal Code. The new criminal classifications
and sentencing structure that take effect next year no longer include these crimes in the highest level of felonies.

A man who behaved erratically, told far-fetched stories of seeing missing Indiana University student Lauren Spierer, and scoped
out the place she was last seen alarmed Bloomington police enough that authorities took from him and his Indianapolis home
51 guns and ammunition.

A man’s conviction on federal firearm charges was vacated Tuesday when the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that possession
of machine guns was not violent crime, citing a case earlier this year that applied the same rationale to possession of sawed-off
shotguns.

A man sentenced to 14 years in prison for his convictions on multiple felony gun and drug charges will still have to serve
the time, but the court must revise the sentencing order to explain why one conviction was ordered to be served consecutive
to the others.

A federal prison sentence of more than 33 years was upheld Monday for a career criminal convicted of leading police on a chase,
assaulting an officer until he lost consciousness and staging an armed, four-hour standoff at an Indianapolis hotel in August
2011.

An Indianapolis man sentenced to 11 years in prison for possession of child pornography and a felony gun charge had his most
serious conviction vacated and his sentence reduced to no more than four years.

An Elkhart felon’s defense that he was drunk at the time he told police that guns they confiscated from his girlfriend’s
apartment belonged to him failed to sway the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, which did find another error and order him to be
resentenced.

A 2007 order banning guns and weapons from the Indianapolis City-County Building that houses most of Marion County’s
Circuit and Superior courts remains in force despite questions raised after the Indiana Legislature widely voided local gun
regulations.

The Indiana Supreme Court Thursday granted the state’s request for a rehearing in a case in which the justices determined
that Anthony Dye’s sentence for unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, which was enhanced under
the general habitual offender statute, was an impermissible double enhancement.

A former Walgreens store employee plans to file a lawsuit Thursday in St. Joseph County alleging the company fired him for
lawfully carrying his gun into another Walgreens location where his wife worked.

A defendant who benefited when charges against him were dropped in exchange for a guilty plea is not entitled to relief under
a subsequent Supreme Court ruling weighing the same set of charges, a panel of the Court of Appeals ruled Friday. Judges also
drew distinctions with a conflicting COA opinion.

A Carmel attorney has filed a lawsuit claiming a Morgan County security company has violated laws that prohibit most employers
from asking whether an employee owns, possesses, uses or transports firearms and from preventing employees from having a gun
locked up and out-of-sight in their vehicles.

Based on a sparse record of evidence that the District Court could consider in determining whether a man can be sentenced
under the Armed Career Criminal Act, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals found the government didn’t meet its burden to
prove two of the man’s previous convictions from events on the same day were separate predicate offenses under the Act.

The United States Sentencing Guidelines aren’t susceptible to vagueness challenges, so a defendant’s claim that
the career offender sentencing guideline is unconstitutionally vague failed, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled.

A father who was upset that he couldn’t talk to his daughter after she was arrested at school for having drugs threatened
to come to the school with his “guns blaring.” He was arrested and given a suspended sentence for Class D felony
intimidation, which the Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed.